Ready? Set? Chew!
- When Seattle Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll spoke highly of quarterbacks Drew Lock and Geno Smith during this month’s mandatory minicamp, you knew it was on. What’s that? Let the Baker Mayfield to Seattle trade watch begin.
- Meanwhile, the speculation revolving around how long and when DeShaun Watson will be suspended intensifies. Watson, through his attorney, has settled 20 of 24 civil suits. Watson admits no wrongdoing. He is shelling out about 100k per suit for each instance of doing nothing wrong.
- If, and it’s a big if, Watson got a year-long suspension it would be over two full years in 2023 since he put on pads for a real game. Adam Schefter and Ian Rappoport both think the league will hit Watson with an all-of 2022 penalty. Does Cleveland regret mortgaging their future for a guy without an immediate future?
- Some years teams just have “it.” The 2022 Yankees have “it.” Sporting the best record by far in the major leagues, they overcame a 6-3 deficit last evening in the ninth to send the Houston Astros and their closer Ryan Pressley back to their Manhatten hotel as losers 7-6. A late June game doesn’t mean much you say? The Yankees thought otherwise.
- How hot are the Yankees? They’re 52-18 for a 74.3 winning percentage. That torrid pace extrapolates out to a 120-42 record. What’s the record for the most regular-season wins in a year? The 2001 Seattle Mariners won 116 and lost 46.
- Rob Gronkowski is retiring. Again. “I will now be going back into my retirement home knowing I gave it everything I had, good or bad, every time I stepped out on the field,” Gronkowski wrote. Tom Brady said the same about 6 months ago, then “unretired.” “It would not surprise me if Tom Brady calls him during the season to come back and Rob answers the call,” Gronk’s agent Drew Rosenhaus told ESPN’s Adam Schefter. Why sweat through training camp when the GOAT can drop a dime at any time during the cooler regular season?
- There was a lot to keep up with on the gun ownership front yesterday. The Senate passed a safety bill including red flag provisions and more extensive background checks. Meanwhile, SCOTUS handed down a 6-3 opinion that New York’s regulations that made it difficult to obtain a license to carry a concealed handgun were unconstitutionally restrictive, and that it should be easier to obtain such a license. So, it’s harder to get a gun, but it’s easier to open carry once you get one.
- The SCOTUS ruling didn’t sit well with washed-up, bitter Keith Olbermann. The far-left, ex-MSNBC host tweeted it has “become necessary to dissolve the Supreme Court of the United States. The first step is for a state the ‘court’ has now forced guns upon, to ignore this ruling. Great. You’re a court? Why and how do you think you can enforce your rulings? #IgnoreThe Court.” Dissolve the Supreme Court? Wasn’t the idea just months ago to pack it with more robes?
- Once upon a time, the US was/is a rule of law country. The rule of law is the political philosophy that all citizens and institutions within a country, state, or community are accountable to the same laws. Olbermann’s immaturity at 63 years of age is not a good look. If you don’t like stopping at stop signs, don’t. Make sense?
- Olbermann wasn’t flying solo. The ruling represents “a middle finger to New York,” Whoopi Goldberg said on ABC’s The View. “Truly a disgraceful ruling,” Barbra Streisand tweeted. Do you wonder if Whoppi and Barbara’s bodyguards are packing? No need to wonder, you know they are.
Speaking of packing, get out of the heat and head north. Bring your firearm if you wish.